In such popular television series as ""The West Wing"" and ""24"", in thrillers like Tom Clancy's novels, and in recent films, plays, graphic novels, and internet cartoons, America has been led by an amazing variety of chief executives. Some of these are real presidents who have been fictionally reimagined. Others are 'might-have-beens' like Philip Roth's President Charles Lindbergh. Many more have never existed except in some storyteller's mind. In ""The Presidents We Imagine"", Jeff Smith examines the presidency's ever-changing place in the American imagination. Ranging across different media and analyzing works of many kinds, some familiar and some never before studied, he explores the evolution of presidential fictions, their central themes, the impact on them of new and emerging media, and their largely unexamined role in the nation's real politics. Smith traces fictions of the presidency from the plays and polemics of the eighteenth century - when the new office was born in what Alexander Hamilton called 'the regions of fiction' - to the digital products of the twenty-first century, with their seemingly limitless user-defined ways of imagining the world's most important political figure. Students of American culture and politics, as well as readers interested in political fiction and film, will find here a colorful, indispensable guide to the many surprising ways Americans have been 'representing' presidents even as those presidents have represented them.
ISBN: | 9780299231842 |
Publication date: | 28th February 2009 |
Author: | Jeff Smith |
Publisher: | The University of Wisconsin Press an imprint of University of Wisconsin Press |
Format: | Paperback |
Pagination: | 391 pages |
Series: | Studies in American Thought and Culture |
Genres: |
Literary studies: c 1800 to c 1900 Literary studies: c 1900 to c 2000 Media studies Political leaders and leadership Literary studies: fiction, novelists and prose writers Films, cinema Television |